Community-Based Organizing Under Control. Informal Control Strategies and Their Limitations on Political Action
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.1285/i20356609v19n2p419-437Keywords:
Informal control and repression, community organizations, Quebec, effects of informal control, marginalized individualsAbstract
This article focuses on informal control strategies and their effects on community-based organizations in Quebec (Canada). These organizations, highly institutionalized and rarely considered as radical actors, have a long tradition of political action in Quebec, intervening as interest groups to present grievances to the government, as well as social actors protesting in the streets. Many control strategies hinder this essential part of associations' mandate. Interviews conducted in 2021 with 14 groups show that, despite these associations' relatively uncontroversial repertoire of action, more than twenty forms of control can be exercised over them. Implemented by multiple actors, these strategies affect individuals, groups, and their missions. These data shed light on what informal control strategies do to the political action of community-based organizations, while informing about control strategies by actors other than the police. Drawing on a sociology of social movements and repression, this article demonstrates the informality integrated into multiple repressive tactics, highlighting the importance of taking it into account when thinking about repression and control practices and their effects, especially on marginalized individuals and groups.
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